The Boston Globe



[Online edition]

Kristen Nygaard, computer programming language pioneer and politician, dies

By Associated Press, 8/11/2002 19:36

OSLO, Norway (AP) Kristen Nygaard, a pioneer in developing the computer programming language that laid the foundation for Java, C++ and others, has died. He was 75.

Nygaard died Saturday after suffering a heart attack in the Norwegian capital, according to media reports.

The University of Oslo professor was acclaimed internationally for his work in developing the programming language Simula.

He and his colleague Ole-Johan Dahl, who died in June, were presented the 2001 A.M. Turing Award and other prizes for their role in the invention of object-oriented programming at the Norwegian Computing Center from 1961 to 1967.

The Association for Computing Machinery, which awarded the prize, said the work paved the way for the widely used programming languages Java, C++ and others used in personal computers and home entertainment devices.

The first models of Simula an abbreviation for simulation language were for calculators, but later editions became the basis for icon-based programming language.

Nygaard also helped spearhead the successful campaign against Norway's membership in the 15-nation EU, which involved holding together a highly divergent group of opponents, including conservative farmers and leftist trade unionists.

Friends and political foes alike gave him credit for the EU opponents' victory in an October 1994 referendum, when Norwegians voted 53 percent to 47 percent against membership.


[Print edition]

Kristen Nygaard, Internet pioneer

Associated Press, 8/12/2002

OSLO - Kristen Nygaard, a pioneer in developing the computer programming language for computers who helped form basis of the Internet, died Saturday of a heart attack. He was 75.

The University of Oslo professor was acclaimed internationally for his work in developing the programming language Simula that formed the basis of MS-DOS and the Internet.

He and his colleague Ole-Johan Dahl, who died in June, were presented the 2001 A.M. Turing Award and other prizes for their role in the invention of object-oriented programming at the Norwegian Computing Center from 1961 to 1967.

The Association for Computing Machinery, which awarded the prize, said the work paved the way for the widely used programming languages Java, C++ and others used in personal computers and home entertainment devices.

"Their work has led to a fundamental change in how software systems are programmed, resulting in reusable, reliable and scalable applications", according to the citation.

The first models of Simula - an abbreviation for simulation language - were for calculators, but later editions became the basis for icon-based programming language on which the Internet and MS-DOS are built.